Socio-Energy Systems in the Anthropocene: Island Metabolisms and the Contested Geographies of Energy Transition

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Title
Socio-Energy Systems in the Anthropocene: Island Metabolisms and the Contested Geographies of Energy Transition

CoPED ID
fb5a25bb-b016-4ca4-b814-28ded6849049

Status
Closed


Value
No funds listed.

Start Date
Sept. 30, 2017

End Date
March 31, 2021

Description

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Climate change has moved energy-society relations centre stage. Political struggles and class relations are finding new expression in the geographies of carbon lock-in, the geographies of (renewable) energy transition, and the geo-spatialities of alternative energy futures; these struggles are themselves shaped by the materiality of socio-energy systems.

Islands have become emblematic figures in the Anthropocene. The dynamics of energy development and change on islands, embedded within complex multi-relational systems, highlights particularly well the ways in which energy transitions more generally are shaped by their spatial and material context, the need to develop frameworks that account for geographical specificity, and the ways both material location and spatial form capture shifts in the operation and contestation of power.

As the energy transition unfolds under the dictates of fossil capital, and many previously peripheral places such as islands become both 'sustainable-development laboratories' and sites of energy extraction and struggle, how are class relations and conflicts over the appropriation of energy surpluses (re)surfacing and being (re)interpreted and (re)expressed in this moment? How can we trace and position struggles over island time-space, land and resources into broader contexts of historical global capitalist relations?

I focus on four islands, two in northern European countries transitioning from oil-based economies (Scotland and Norway) and two in southern European countries emerging from post-crisis situations (Spain and Greece). Drawing on eco-Marxist theories of metabolism, I use a 'relational comparison' framework, which focuses on spatio-historical specifications, interconnections and mutually constitutive processes, and root this in a dialectical and historical-geographical materialist understanding of energy systems. I use desk-based exploratory research, interviewing and storytelling, and critical ethnographic techniques.

ALEX LOFTUS SUPER_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Climate changes
  2. Energy policy
  3. Renewable energy sources
  4. Energy
  5. Sustainable development
  6. Class struggle
  7. Land use
  8. Political systems

Extracted key phrases
  1. Energy transition
  2. Energy system
  3. Alternative energy future
  4. Energy development
  5. Energy surplus
  6. Energy extraction
  7. Socio
  8. Society relation centre stage
  9. Island Metabolisms
  10. Historical global capitalist relation
  11. Class relation
  12. Climate change
  13. Island time
  14. Political struggle
  15. Anthropocene

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